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�
The College
Volume IV. No. 4
BRYN MAWR, PA., OCTOBER 24, 1917
Price 5 Cents
FACT8 ABOUT THE SECOND LOAN
Subscriptions may be made through
the B. M. Liberty Loan Team: in lump
sums; in weekly instalments of $.25, $.50,
1.75, or $1; or by paying 2 per cent of the
whole loan before October 27, 18 per cent
on NoTember 15, 40 per cent on Decem-
ber 16, and 40 per cent on January 15.
The bonds bear an interest of 4 per
cent, payable semi-annually, on Novem-
ber 15 and May 15. They are exchang-
able on request for bonds of later Liberty
Loans bearing higher rates of interest.
An effort is being made to have one
billion dollars of the three billion dollar
loan subscribed by or through women.
VARSITY TAKES FIRST GAME
FROM HADDONFIELD, 6 TO 2
M. WILLARD '17 SHOOTS FOUR GOALS
� STRONG DEFENSE IN NEW LINE-UP
In spite of the holes left in Varsity by
the loss of 1917, Bryn Mawr won the first
hockey game of the season last Saturday,
defeating Haddonfield 6 to 2 In a good
match, market! by hard hitting. The first
half revealed a weak forward line on the
Bryn Mawr side, but the second showed
Varsity's come-back when the forwards
took the offensive and shot five goals.
Last year's Varsity defense, repre-
sented by R. Gatling '19, goal; M. Pea-
cock '19, fullback; M. Bacon '18 and B.
Weaver "20, former substitutes at half-
back, formed the backbone of the defense
on Saturday, but in the forward line
great changes appeared. O. Hearne '19
has been moved from inside to right wing
in the position played by L. Brown '17
last year; P. Turle '18 was substituting
for halfback instead of for wing, which
has been her regular place; and M. M.
Carey "20 has changed from center half
to center forward to take the place of C.
Stevens "17..
Tie at End of First Half
In the first half the forwards were in-
effective in the circle, partly on account
of careless aiming and partly due to Had-
donfleld's fine defense, the goal, Miss
Bowden. being the All-Philadelphia goal
of last year. Though the ball was in
Haddonfield territory most of this half,
no score was made until in the last seven
minutes of play M. M. Carey shot it in.
After the bully, O. Hearne took the ball
down but lost it and Haddonfield swept
into Bryn Mawr territory. A good stop,
made by R. Gatling, was followed Imme-
diately by Haddonfleld's first goal, shot
by the captain, Miss Zimmerman. Half
time was called with the ball on the Bryn
Mawr 25-yard line.
Forwards Show More Dash
The Varsity line picked up In the sec-
ond half and dealt more effectively with
the opposing defense. O. Hearne showed
np well at wing; M. Willard and A. Stiles
(Continued on page 3, column 1)
BANNER SHOW A VAUDEVILLE
FEATURING TOGAED
COMEDIANS
Shakespeare Revised Played Before over half of loan subscribed
Freshmen at "Side-by-Side Theater"
Contrary to the slogan at the head of
their program, "the banner'B all right, the
show's rotten", the Juniors showed them-
selves very good two-a-day artists and
presented an adequate bill last Saturday
night. From the trained seals at the be-
ginning to the ingenious Introduction of
the banner waved to save 1921 from the Tne money from all college bills paid
oncoming train, every line of the rather biet,wepn last Monday night and next Sat-
, . * ... . i urduy noon, the office announced, will be
crude humor was greeted with shouts of , invested by the college in U. S. Govern-
WOULD PUT COLLEGE ON HONOR ROLL
OF LOAN SUBSCRIPTION )
S31.000, over half of the t50,000 hoped
for by Saturday night, was the total
amount subscribed through the Bryn
Mawr Liberty Loan team by Tuesday
night. The amounts subscribed 'daily
have been: Thursday, $5600; Friday,
$7050; Saturday. $1250; Monday, $5200,
and Tuesday, $12,000.
laughter.
In the tradition of "Gilbert the Filbert,
the kernel of the nuts", M. Butler, as
Alonzo van Mudgekin, more than con-
vinced the Freshmen that they were
"wild, simply wild", over him. His tal-
ent for burlesque was perhaps more evi-
dent than his gift for singing.
The revised and expurgated version of
"Julius Caesar", was taken from a much-
used vaudeville skit, put to college music,
and interspersed with local hits. R. Gat-
ling, as the lisping Caesar, met a noble
and pathetic death at the point of a
breadknife, while the three conspirators,
hot on the trail of the triumphant trium-
virate, slid on a banana peel to their
doom at the battle of Phillippi.
Ventriloquist Scene Makes Hit
The rag-doll Eddie (R. Hlckman), and
the professor (A. Thorndlke), after get-
ting off several jokes as time-honored as
the model for their act, the typical ven-
triloquist turn, contributed the best local
hits of the evening. The audience was
loth to see them go even at the entrance
of the Evil Kvens, conspirators in the
drama of "Death Despoiled". E. Lanier.
as the ingenue 1921, in while organdie
and red ribbons, made a perilous descent
from the "bicycle track" Into the treach-
erous grip of 1920. J. Peabody, who as-
sisted 1918, the varfipire. F. Allison, in
lashing her to the railroad track. T.
Haynes, as 1919. seized the new red ban-
ner and flagged the train.
The performance was sustained through-
out by the spirited playing of the orches-
tra under the leadership of EL Huntting.
M. Martin was chairman of the Show
''ommittee. Dancing preceded the per-
formance.
ment Liberty Bonds.
EDUCATED PEOPLE MUST BACK
GOVERNMENT BY BUYING BONDS
MRS. SMITH SETS $50,000 AS MINIMUM
BRYN MAWR SUBSCRIPTION
OVER 1500 DRES8ING8 FIR8T
VVEEK'8 WORK AT RED CRO88
1S38 dressings was the total output of
the Red Cross workroom In Merlon last
week. The average attendance was 25
workers a night.
The new Standard Red Cross directions
for knitting will be given out and wool
sold at the workroom from 9.30 to 10 on
Monday, Tuesday, Thursday, and Friday
nights. Finished articles must be re-
turned within two months if the wool Is
taken without payment The wool is $2
a pound, a pound containing four hanks,
enoojrh fdr four pairs of socks. It may
be hid in white for socks, and gray or
khaki for Other- articles
DR. ALEXIS CARREL POSSIBLE
SPEAKER BEFORE SCIENCE CLUB
The celebrated surgeon, and pioneer in
the study of latent life and the transplan-
tation of animal tissue. Dr. Alexis Carrel,
will probably speak at Bryn Mawr under
the auspices of the Science Club some-
time during the winter. Dr. Carrel has
been, since 1909, Associate Fellow at the
Rockefeller Institute, and won the Nobel
Prize In 1912.
"The subscription of $5600 on the first
day of the campaign was encouraging,
but not encouraging enough; we should
have on our lists every single person in
our community", said Mrs. William Roy
Smith, Professor of PTfflf Iff! and cap-
tain of the Bryn Mawr Liberty Loan
Team, speaking in Chapel last Friday.
"We are intelligent citizens, conscious of
our national duties, and must respond to
them. The response means that we ITS
patriotic�nothing more". Mrs. Smith be-
lieves that the college ought to sub-
scribe $60,000 to the Liberty Loan before
the end of the campaign on October 27.
According to Mrs. Smith we have
three prime duties in this time of our
country's crisis: to realize the crucial
problem of food and Insist on wheat less
and meatless days, to support with work
and contributions all the relief organiza-
tions of the country, especially the Red
iKiss, and to lend money to the Gov. in
ment.
Mrs. Smith compared life in a country
to life in a family, where in ordinary
times children enjoyed all possible bene-
fits, and in times'of stress were expected
to recognize their filial duty and give
help where it was needed.
LIBERTY LOAN CAMPAIGN HITS
COLLEGE PURSES
Miss Dimon First Subscriber Reached
By Local Team
The nation-wide Liberty Loan cam-
paign has been an important feature of
the life of the college during the past
week. The Bryn Mawr Liberty Loan
Team, captained by Mrs. William Roy
Smith. Professor of Economics, had by
Tuesday night succeeded in raising
$31,100 worth of subscriptions to the
l^>an. and has every hope of getting
$50,000 by Saturday night. An effort is
being made to obtain a subscription from
�TWyaiM connected with the college:
Faculty, staff, gradua'cs, undergraduates,
and employees.
Every day since la: i Friday some mem-
ber of the College Liberty Loan Team
has been in the nil u hite ami blue booth
on the ground floor of Taylor between
8.30 and 12.30 in the morning and 2 and 3
in the afternoon to sell Bonds. The
ream, however, has not confined its ef-
forts to this booth, for in a canvass of the
'skilled Italian" laborers last week $2400
was raised.
Miss Abigail (amp Dimon. Recording
Secretary of the college, bought the first
Liberty Bond to be sold by the ( ollege
Team On the first day of the campaign,
Thursday of last week, bonds wcic taken
out by twenty-six undergraduates, nine
members of the Faculty, five staff mem-
bers, two college employees, one gradu-
ate, and one committee, the Committee
for the Chinese Scholarship.
CLASS ELECTIONS CONTESTED
IS INDEPENDENCE DESIRABLE
PROBLEM OF WAR RELIEF BODY
Work May Pass From Under C. A.
ALUMNAE FAVOR NEW ORSANIZATION
MOVIES AT B. M. FOR WAR RELIEF
FIRST FILM 8HOWN SATURDAY
Movies, consisting of a feature film
and current events, will be presented in
the gymnasium next Saturday for the
benefit of War Relief.
The Junior Oroheetra will provide the
accompaniment and the music for danc-
ing before the nlaas. M. Martin 'IS and
M. L. Thurman '\9, who raa the movies
here last year for the beaeat of the En-
dowment Fund. ha�# agered to manage
them this year for War Relief. Twenty
ive cents admission will be charged.
Seniors Vote Twice For L Hodges
Contested elections were the order of
the day last week In the case of the even
(-class choice of officers.
Louise Hodges was elected president of
the Senior Class, K. Holliday, vice-presi-
dent, and K. Shnrpless, secretary, at a
meeting called by petition last Wednes
day evening to contest the elections held
earlier in the day, when C. Dodge, the re-
tiring president, misinterpreted the con-
stitution and ruled that there was only
one nominee eligible in the case of both
president and secretary. The same offi-
cers were elected at the second meeting
as at the first.
Miss Hodges was secretary of the Un-
dergraduate Association last year and Is
now on the advisory board. She is an ed-
itor of "Tlpyn o' Bob" and has acted in
both her class plays.
M. M. Carey to Lead 1tff0
M. M. Carey, athlete and alee* of Free!
dent Thomas. Is president of the Sopho-
more Class. D. flasltn and C. Cotemaa be-
tar v�s**ressd�nt aftd secretary respect-
ively. These elections, like lSlfa, were
held over again by reasx* ef a terwntfr
canty.
War Relief and the Christian Associa-
tion, and whether they shall be related,
the question gradually compelling the at-
tention of Hi" Whole college, was first offi-
cially disci i I oa October^6thjt a
joint meeting of the Cnderi;nurMve and
Christian Association boards and the ex-
ecutives of the War Relief Committee.
On the ground that the proposed work
for a reconstruction unit should Include
all members of the college, whether or
not members of the Christian Associa-
tion, all alumna;. Faculty, and staff, it
was agreed that the War Relief Commit-
tee should be made into a separate body
independent of any existing organisation
and that the new body should be directed
by an executive staff of two members
elected from each class, two from the
graduates, and representatives from Fac-
ulty and alumna?. The plan, it was felt,
would not necessarily mean a revolution
In the committee's work, but would
merely put it on a wider foundation. The
workroom would go on as before.
Maes Meeting Falls Through
The project was explained at the
Senior and Junior class meetings last
week. Bills and posters were printed
summoning every one connected with the
college to a mass meeting to be held taut
Hoaday. at which the new. Independent
War Relief OoamNtee was te be organ-
ised, and over whteh the eaatnaan of the
end i a. Ooauatttee would preside a
Cawlsctaw AsawaUttea sweeting for
'niinufd on page S. coluata. 1)

�
The College
Volume IV. No. 4
BRYN MAWR, PA., OCTOBER 24, 1917
Price 5 Cents
FACT8 ABOUT THE SECOND LOAN
Subscriptions may be made through
the B. M. Liberty Loan Team: in lump
sums; in weekly instalments of $.25, $.50,
1.75, or $1; or by paying 2 per cent of the
whole loan before October 27, 18 per cent
on NoTember 15, 40 per cent on Decem-
ber 16, and 40 per cent on January 15.
The bonds bear an interest of 4 per
cent, payable semi-annually, on Novem-
ber 15 and May 15. They are exchang-
able on request for bonds of later Liberty
Loans bearing higher rates of interest.
An effort is being made to have one
billion dollars of the three billion dollar
loan subscribed by or through women.
VARSITY TAKES FIRST GAME
FROM HADDONFIELD, 6 TO 2
M. WILLARD '17 SHOOTS FOUR GOALS
� STRONG DEFENSE IN NEW LINE-UP
In spite of the holes left in Varsity by
the loss of 1917, Bryn Mawr won the first
hockey game of the season last Saturday,
defeating Haddonfield 6 to 2 In a good
match, market! by hard hitting. The first
half revealed a weak forward line on the
Bryn Mawr side, but the second showed
Varsity's come-back when the forwards
took the offensive and shot five goals.
Last year's Varsity defense, repre-
sented by R. Gatling '19, goal; M. Pea-
cock '19, fullback; M. Bacon '18 and B.
Weaver "20, former substitutes at half-
back, formed the backbone of the defense
on Saturday, but in the forward line
great changes appeared. O. Hearne '19
has been moved from inside to right wing
in the position played by L. Brown '17
last year; P. Turle '18 was substituting
for halfback instead of for wing, which
has been her regular place; and M. M.
Carey "20 has changed from center half
to center forward to take the place of C.
Stevens "17..
Tie at End of First Half
In the first half the forwards were in-
effective in the circle, partly on account
of careless aiming and partly due to Had-
donfleld's fine defense, the goal, Miss
Bowden. being the All-Philadelphia goal
of last year. Though the ball was in
Haddonfield territory most of this half,
no score was made until in the last seven
minutes of play M. M. Carey shot it in.
After the bully, O. Hearne took the ball
down but lost it and Haddonfield swept
into Bryn Mawr territory. A good stop,
made by R. Gatling, was followed Imme-
diately by Haddonfleld's first goal, shot
by the captain, Miss Zimmerman. Half
time was called with the ball on the Bryn
Mawr 25-yard line.
Forwards Show More Dash
The Varsity line picked up In the sec-
ond half and dealt more effectively with
the opposing defense. O. Hearne showed
np well at wing; M. Willard and A. Stiles
(Continued on page 3, column 1)
BANNER SHOW A VAUDEVILLE
FEATURING TOGAED
COMEDIANS
Shakespeare Revised Played Before over half of loan subscribed
Freshmen at "Side-by-Side Theater"
Contrary to the slogan at the head of
their program, "the banner'B all right, the
show's rotten", the Juniors showed them-
selves very good two-a-day artists and
presented an adequate bill last Saturday
night. From the trained seals at the be-
ginning to the ingenious Introduction of
the banner waved to save 1921 from the Tne money from all college bills paid
oncoming train, every line of the rather biet,wepn last Monday night and next Sat-
, . * ... . i urduy noon, the office announced, will be
crude humor was greeted with shouts of , invested by the college in U. S. Govern-
WOULD PUT COLLEGE ON HONOR ROLL
OF LOAN SUBSCRIPTION )
S31.000, over half of the t50,000 hoped
for by Saturday night, was the total
amount subscribed through the Bryn
Mawr Liberty Loan team by Tuesday
night. The amounts subscribed 'daily
have been: Thursday, $5600; Friday,
$7050; Saturday. $1250; Monday, $5200,
and Tuesday, $12,000.
laughter.
In the tradition of "Gilbert the Filbert,
the kernel of the nuts", M. Butler, as
Alonzo van Mudgekin, more than con-
vinced the Freshmen that they were
"wild, simply wild", over him. His tal-
ent for burlesque was perhaps more evi-
dent than his gift for singing.
The revised and expurgated version of
"Julius Caesar", was taken from a much-
used vaudeville skit, put to college music,
and interspersed with local hits. R. Gat-
ling, as the lisping Caesar, met a noble
and pathetic death at the point of a
breadknife, while the three conspirators,
hot on the trail of the triumphant trium-
virate, slid on a banana peel to their
doom at the battle of Phillippi.
Ventriloquist Scene Makes Hit
The rag-doll Eddie (R. Hlckman), and
the professor (A. Thorndlke), after get-
ting off several jokes as time-honored as
the model for their act, the typical ven-
triloquist turn, contributed the best local
hits of the evening. The audience was
loth to see them go even at the entrance
of the Evil Kvens, conspirators in the
drama of "Death Despoiled". E. Lanier.
as the ingenue 1921, in while organdie
and red ribbons, made a perilous descent
from the "bicycle track" Into the treach-
erous grip of 1920. J. Peabody, who as-
sisted 1918, the varfipire. F. Allison, in
lashing her to the railroad track. T.
Haynes, as 1919. seized the new red ban-
ner and flagged the train.
The performance was sustained through-
out by the spirited playing of the orches-
tra under the leadership of EL Huntting.
M. Martin was chairman of the Show
''ommittee. Dancing preceded the per-
formance.
ment Liberty Bonds.
EDUCATED PEOPLE MUST BACK
GOVERNMENT BY BUYING BONDS
MRS. SMITH SETS $50,000 AS MINIMUM
BRYN MAWR SUBSCRIPTION
OVER 1500 DRES8ING8 FIR8T
VVEEK'8 WORK AT RED CRO88
1S38 dressings was the total output of
the Red Cross workroom In Merlon last
week. The average attendance was 25
workers a night.
The new Standard Red Cross directions
for knitting will be given out and wool
sold at the workroom from 9.30 to 10 on
Monday, Tuesday, Thursday, and Friday
nights. Finished articles must be re-
turned within two months if the wool Is
taken without payment The wool is $2
a pound, a pound containing four hanks,
enoojrh fdr four pairs of socks. It may
be hid in white for socks, and gray or
khaki for Other- articles
DR. ALEXIS CARREL POSSIBLE
SPEAKER BEFORE SCIENCE CLUB
The celebrated surgeon, and pioneer in
the study of latent life and the transplan-
tation of animal tissue. Dr. Alexis Carrel,
will probably speak at Bryn Mawr under
the auspices of the Science Club some-
time during the winter. Dr. Carrel has
been, since 1909, Associate Fellow at the
Rockefeller Institute, and won the Nobel
Prize In 1912.
"The subscription of $5600 on the first
day of the campaign was encouraging,
but not encouraging enough; we should
have on our lists every single person in
our community", said Mrs. William Roy
Smith, Professor of PTfflf Iff! and cap-
tain of the Bryn Mawr Liberty Loan
Team, speaking in Chapel last Friday.
"We are intelligent citizens, conscious of
our national duties, and must respond to
them. The response means that we ITS
patriotic�nothing more". Mrs. Smith be-
lieves that the college ought to sub-
scribe $60,000 to the Liberty Loan before
the end of the campaign on October 27.
According to Mrs. Smith we have
three prime duties in this time of our
country's crisis: to realize the crucial
problem of food and Insist on wheat less
and meatless days, to support with work
and contributions all the relief organiza-
tions of the country, especially the Red
iKiss, and to lend money to the Gov. in
ment.
Mrs. Smith compared life in a country
to life in a family, where in ordinary
times children enjoyed all possible bene-
fits, and in times'of stress were expected
to recognize their filial duty and give
help where it was needed.
LIBERTY LOAN CAMPAIGN HITS
COLLEGE PURSES
Miss Dimon First Subscriber Reached
By Local Team
The nation-wide Liberty Loan cam-
paign has been an important feature of
the life of the college during the past
week. The Bryn Mawr Liberty Loan
Team, captained by Mrs. William Roy
Smith. Professor of Economics, had by
Tuesday night succeeded in raising
$31,100 worth of subscriptions to the
l^>an. and has every hope of getting
$50,000 by Saturday night. An effort is
being made to obtain a subscription from
�TWyaiM connected with the college:
Faculty, staff, gradua'cs, undergraduates,
and employees.
Every day since la: i Friday some mem-
ber of the College Liberty Loan Team
has been in the nil u hite ami blue booth
on the ground floor of Taylor between
8.30 and 12.30 in the morning and 2 and 3
in the afternoon to sell Bonds. The
ream, however, has not confined its ef-
forts to this booth, for in a canvass of the
'skilled Italian" laborers last week $2400
was raised.
Miss Abigail (amp Dimon. Recording
Secretary of the college, bought the first
Liberty Bond to be sold by the ( ollege
Team On the first day of the campaign,
Thursday of last week, bonds wcic taken
out by twenty-six undergraduates, nine
members of the Faculty, five staff mem-
bers, two college employees, one gradu-
ate, and one committee, the Committee
for the Chinese Scholarship.
CLASS ELECTIONS CONTESTED
IS INDEPENDENCE DESIRABLE
PROBLEM OF WAR RELIEF BODY
Work May Pass From Under C. A.
ALUMNAE FAVOR NEW ORSANIZATION
MOVIES AT B. M. FOR WAR RELIEF
FIRST FILM 8HOWN SATURDAY
Movies, consisting of a feature film
and current events, will be presented in
the gymnasium next Saturday for the
benefit of War Relief.
The Junior Oroheetra will provide the
accompaniment and the music for danc-
ing before the nlaas. M. Martin 'IS and
M. L. Thurman '\9, who raa the movies
here last year for the beaeat of the En-
dowment Fund. ha�# agered to manage
them this year for War Relief. Twenty
ive cents admission will be charged.
Seniors Vote Twice For L Hodges
Contested elections were the order of
the day last week In the case of the even
(-class choice of officers.
Louise Hodges was elected president of
the Senior Class, K. Holliday, vice-presi-
dent, and K. Shnrpless, secretary, at a
meeting called by petition last Wednes
day evening to contest the elections held
earlier in the day, when C. Dodge, the re-
tiring president, misinterpreted the con-
stitution and ruled that there was only
one nominee eligible in the case of both
president and secretary. The same offi-
cers were elected at the second meeting
as at the first.
Miss Hodges was secretary of the Un-
dergraduate Association last year and Is
now on the advisory board. She is an ed-
itor of "Tlpyn o' Bob" and has acted in
both her class plays.
M. M. Carey to Lead 1tff0
M. M. Carey, athlete and alee* of Free!
dent Thomas. Is president of the Sopho-
more Class. D. flasltn and C. Cotemaa be-
tar v�s**ressd�nt aftd secretary respect-
ively. These elections, like lSlfa, were
held over again by reasx* ef a terwntfr
canty.
War Relief and the Christian Associa-
tion, and whether they shall be related,
the question gradually compelling the at-
tention of Hi" Whole college, was first offi-
cially disci i I oa October^6thjt a
joint meeting of the Cnderi;nurMve and
Christian Association boards and the ex-
ecutives of the War Relief Committee.
On the ground that the proposed work
for a reconstruction unit should Include
all members of the college, whether or
not members of the Christian Associa-
tion, all alumna;. Faculty, and staff, it
was agreed that the War Relief Commit-
tee should be made into a separate body
independent of any existing organisation
and that the new body should be directed
by an executive staff of two members
elected from each class, two from the
graduates, and representatives from Fac-
ulty and alumna?. The plan, it was felt,
would not necessarily mean a revolution
In the committee's work, but would
merely put it on a wider foundation. The
workroom would go on as before.
Maes Meeting Falls Through
The project was explained at the
Senior and Junior class meetings last
week. Bills and posters were printed
summoning every one connected with the
college to a mass meeting to be held taut
Hoaday. at which the new. Independent
War Relief OoamNtee was te be organ-
ised, and over whteh the eaatnaan of the
end i a. Ooauatttee would preside a
Cawlsctaw AsawaUttea sweeting for
'niinufd on page S. coluata. 1)